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Lee is facing new charges after being arrested last week in a car stolen from a rental agency for the Louisville International Airport, and the commonwealth wants his probation on that previous case revoked.

Lee made his latest appearance in court Tuesday morning.

He was already in jail at Metro Corrections for his recent arrest.

But now, prosecutors want Lee locked up for the previous manslaughter conviction.

"Just so we're clear, this court sentenced Mr. Lee to a combined disposition of one year to serve and one year on probation. He has served the one year, he's in the midst of his one year on probation, albeit I think that lapses in December of this year. So, in my judgment, he has roughly five months left of probation," said Jefferson Circuit Court Judge Mitch Perry.

The commonwealth now wants that probation revoked and to send Lee to an adult incarceration facility for those remaining five months.

Lee previously did time at a juvenile facility because he was 16 at the time of the crash.

But Perry wasn't ready make a decision yet and instead set a hearing for later this month.

"Unfortunately again, the gravitational pull of the streets and street life is very, very powerful," said community activist Christopher 2X.

Seven months ago, after serving his sentence for the 2008 crash, Lee pledged to the victims' families to turn his life around.

"(I'm) just shocked, devastated. Like, 'Oh, my Lord, I can't believe it,'" said Frank Shields, whose son, Aaron, was one of the four teens killed.

Lee was charged with murder but convicted of manslaughter.

"We don't have any anger. We let that go Jan. 10, 2010, in the courtroom," said Shields.

That same courtroom will be the site of Lee's revocation hearing, now set for Friday, July 27.